Security Levels

Rhonda
Fleming-Makell

Lieutenant Commander, USCG (Ret.)

LCDR Fleming-Makell, a regular commissioned
officer in the United States Coast Guard, completed 20 years of military
service for her country this year. In addition, she is the first
African-American woman commissioned officer to earn a retirement in the
history of the United States Coast Guard, nearly 30 years after women
first started serving their country in this capacity in 1976.

LCDR Fleming-Makell’s final assignment as
a Law Enforcement Specialist was served within the Office of Law
Enforcement at Coast Guard Headquarters in Washington, DC. The U. S.
Coast Guard is the nation's premier maritime law enforcement agency and
has broad, multi-faceted jurisdictional authority. LCDR Fleming-Makell
was responsible for development of Coast Guard-wide law enforcement
policy, program management for several Department of Homeland Security
initiatives, Maritime Law Enforcement Schools, Law Enforcement Councils
and maintenance of a $1M budget. A s Program Manager of several Homeland
Security initiatives, she successfully implemented the first official
Coast Guard Canine Program since World War II. Most recently, on
March 8, 2004, her efforts with the Canine Program recently thwarted a
potential terrorist situation when the Coast Guard Canine Team, searching
with ATF, found Improvised explosive devices such as pipe bombs, electric,
and non-electric blasting caps in a house. Her leadership of the
Coast Guard Canine Program certainly prevented life and property
casualties usually associated with such explosive devices.

In June of 1984, she enlisted in the United
States Coast Guard while still in college. Upon completion of Coast
Guard Recruit Training at Cape May, New Jersey, she returned to school in
Orangeburg, South Carolina to complete her undergraduate degree.
LCDR Fleming-Makell is a 1986 graduate of the Coast Guard Officer
Candidate School (OCS) located in Yorktown, Virginia. After
graduation from OCS, she was assigned to the Third Coast Guard District as
the Human Relations Counselor in New York City and became a qualified
trainer and counselor in the areas of Human Relations and Civil Rights.

Upon completion of her tour as Human
Relations Counselor, she was assigned to Coast Guard Support Center New
York as the Assistant Special Services Officer. Shortly after, LCDR
Fleming-Makell was stationed at Coast Guard Group New York. As a
junior officer, she was assigned to the operations division, successfully
qualifying as a Duty Officer responding to Search and Rescue (SAR), Law
Enforcement, and Marine Safety emergencies. Other duties included,
but were not limited to, Assistant Operations Officer, Classified Material
Control Officer, and Communications Officer.

In 1991, her next duty assignment was the
Coast Guard Command Center in Washington, DC. As Operations Officer,
she was responsible for the collection, dissemination, and reporting of
all oil spills in the United States. Following this tour in 1994,
LCDR Fleming-Makell was assigned as Assistant Operations Officer at one of
the busiest units in the Coast Guard, “Group Miami”.

As Assistant Operations Officer, she was
directly responsible for all delegated tasks related to collection,
evaluation, and dissemination of operational tasking/assignments, and
information to four multi-mission Stations, two Aids-to-Navigation Teams,
nine patrol boats, and one buoy tender. Duties included, Search and
Rescue, Law Enforcement, Illegal Migration Operations, and
Aids-to-Navigation. During her tenure here at Group Miami she
conducted many joint law enforcement operations with the Customs Service,
FBI, etc., successfully seizing millions of dollars worth of cocaine,
marijuana and other illegal contraband. Three years later, in
September of 1997, LCDR Fleming-Makell was transferred to the Seventh
Coast Guard District.

As the Chief of District Personnel, she
managed personnel support programs for all Seventh District units, in an
area covering the entire Caribbean basin and points between the North and
South Carolina border and the eastern most portions of the Gulf of Mexico,
which included but was not limited to, five Group units, five Marine
Safety Office’s, four Air Stations, 25 patrol boats, 20 Multi-Mission
stations, eight cutters, four buoy tenders, 9 Aids-to-Navigation Teams,
and one LORAN Station. Upon completion of this tour, she was
assigned to Coast Guard Headquarters, Office of Law Enforcement in
Washington D.C., for her final tour in August 2001.

LCDR Fleming-Makell is a 1985 graduate of
S.C. State University. She earned a Bachelor of Science Degree in
Psychology with a minor in Special Education. In addition, LCDR
Fleming-Makell successfully completed a Masters of Business Administration
with a concentration in Technology Management from the University of
Phoenix and is a member of Delta Sigma Theta, Sorority, Inc.

For years, this woman has stood out among
many as she has always found the time to help and mentor those coming up
behind her. In fact, LCDR Fleming-Makell was honored in an article
titled, “Not Just a Blue Suit,” featured in the March 1993 edition of Essence
Magazine. In addition, her retirement ceremony was featured in
the May 24th, 2004 issue of Jet magazine. Furthermore she was
most recently honored with the Portraits in Black Award from the
internationally acclaimed Union Temple Baptist Church in Washington, DC.
Other prominent figures receiving this award included the likes of Nelson
Mandela of South Africa.

A native of the Carolina’s, LCDR Fleming-Makell
was born in Morganton, North Carolina and raised in Greenville, South
Carolina. She is the daughter of William and Earlene Fleming, of
Greenville, South Carolina. LCDR Fleming-Makell resides in Port
Tobacco, Maryland with her husband LCDR William J. Makell Jr. and their
three children; Branden, William, and Selena.